Becker's Hospital Review

November 2021 Issue of Becker's Hospital Review

Issue link: https://beckershealthcare.uberflip.com/i/1424600

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 21 of 95

22 POPULATION HEALTH 22 CEO / STRATEGY An Arkansas healthcare CEO's 'excruciating decision' amid vaccination exemption controversy By Kelly Gooch A s Conway (Ark.) Regional Health System introduced its COVID-19 vaccine mandate, officials said they noted more religious exemption requests that cited the use of fetal cell lines to develop and test the vaccines. What resulted was a form from Conway for employees requesting reli- gious exemptions to confirm they do not use certain everyday medica- tions, such as Benadryl, Sudafed and Tylenol, in alignment with their sincerely held religious beliefs. In this Sept. 27 interview, Conway President and CEO Matt Troup dis- cusses the attention the form gained from the community, staff response and its workforce vaccination policy. Conway's vaccination mandate On Aug. 12, Conway Regional announced its COVID-19 vaccination mandate for all employees. e hospital said employees requesting a medical and/or religious exemption must complete an exemption request form, and its exemption request policy is similar to the one it has for the flu vaccine. Employees who do not have an exemption were required to have both doses of Pfizer or Moderna, or the single-dose Johnson & Johnson shot, by Oct. 8 or be suspended for three weeks. If noncompliant by Nov. 1, they would be terminated. At the time of publication, the dead- line had yet to pass. 'Something else was going on' "e flu vaccine is mandated. It's required, and has been at Conway for sev- eral years, so any given year may have a few religious exemptions regarding flu shot," Mr. Troup explained. "ey're always pretty solid in terms of their rationale. By 'solid,' I mean they have a track record of their sincerely held belief. ey don't take vaccines. ey don't take supplements. Whatever it is, they can justify or validate their sincerely held belief. "We went from two or three religious exemptions a year to 45, which told us something else was going on, and maybe they didn't understand how prevalent fetal cell use is in the testing and development of medicine, common everyday medicine. So, we wanted to make sure that staff were aware how ubiquitous this was, and secondly, to be consistent in their sincerely held belief." e form lists 30 medications and asks employees to "truthfully ac- knowledge and affirm that my sincerely held religious belief is consistent and true and I do not use or will use any of the medications listed as examples or any other medication … that has used fetal cell lines in their development and/or testing." Few religions outright reject vaccinations, but some religious groups have raised the issue of vaccines being developed and tested on fetal cell lines, which are grown in labs based on aborted fetal cells, according to 9News, which spoke to an infectious disease expert at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha. "I understand why people have concerns," James Lawler, MD, the expert and a practicing Catholic, told the news station. "e bottom line is al- most all the medical products we use have in some way been touched by research that's been done on fetal cell lines." Mr. Troup said the purpose of the form is to be educational about med- icines and vaccines and for employees to validate that their beliefs are sincerely held. Handling pushback from the community, staff News of the religious exemption's requirement to attest that 30 medi- cations would not be used was widely covered in the media, garnering attention from staff members and the public. But pushback has come more from the community, Mr. Troup said. "Relatively speaking, employee response has been practically nil. More of the response has come from people in the community, some anonymous and some not. It has ranged from I'm either an abortion-loving Nazi or brilliant," he said. "It has really been very polarizing. ... When we first submitted the attestation, we had about a handful of staff sign it, send it back. ere were a few folks who expressed some concerns, questions, and gave us some feedback. ... Negative feedback was coming from the general community of people. en other people from all over the coun- try started inquiring about it." Mr. Troup said staff morale and engagement are important for Conway, so the system focused on hearing workers' concerns and decided to grant a provisional exemption. is means workers requesting a religious exemption who don't sign the form would be approved but might be asked to sign the form later. He said several employees seeking religious exemptions have signed the form, and Conway may not be able to accommodate those who don't sign at some point. "For many staff, we said, 'You have a fetal cell issue, religious issue, so if you don't sign that form, what we're going to say is we're granting a pro- visional exemption, and if you come back, or if we need to come back at some point in the future and validate your sincerely held belief, we may do that, we may not,'" said Mr. Troup. "What we found is that among a lot of staff, the issue was about con- cern with the vaccine, which is vaccine hesitancy, for whatever reason. I would note this is a minority of the total population. We have about 45 fetal cell exemption requests out of almost 1,800 employees. I consider that a really small number in the grand scheme of things," he said. Mr. Troup said he understands the public interest in the system's form, but people should also know a majority of Conway workers have been excited about and accepting of the vaccine. "e overwhelming majority of them are supporters of this vaccine and think it's doing a lot of good for our community and for our patients," he said. "is was an excruciating decision to make, to make it mandatory, but we did it because we felt like it was the right thing to do, even amid inter- nal debate about should we do it, are we going to lose staff and be able to continue operations?" he said. "I'm very proud of the fact that at the end of the day I can account for over 97 percent of our team being vaccinated or exempted." As of Sept. 27, the time of publication, less than 5 percent had medical or religious exemptions. n

Articles in this issue

view archives of Becker's Hospital Review - November 2021 Issue of Becker's Hospital Review